fbpx
Wikipedia

Watsessing Avenue station

Watsessing Avenue station (also known as Watsessing) is a New Jersey Transit rail station in Bloomfield, New Jersey, along the Montclair-Boonton Line. It is located beneath the Bloomfield Police Benevolent Association meeting hall (which formerly served as the station building) near the corner of Watsessing Avenue and Orange Street in Bloomfield. It is one of two stations on the line where the boarding platform is below ground level (the Glen Ridge station, two stops away from it, is the other). The Watsessing station and the Kingsland station in Lyndhurst on the Main Line shared similar designs (both station platforms are located below street level) and were built about the same time.

Watsessing Avenue
Watsessing Avenue station as viewed from its outbound platform, showing results of rehabilitation project undertaken in 2008.
General information
LocationWatsessing Avenue
Bloomfield, New Jersey
Coordinates40°46′58″N 74°11′55″W / 40.7827°N 74.1986°W / 40.7827; -74.1986
Owned byNew Jersey Transit
Platforms2 side platforms
Tracks2
Connections NJ Transit Bus: 94
Construction
Structure typeBelow-grade
Platform levels2
Parking59 spaces, 2 accessible spaces[1]
Bicycle facilitiesRacks
AccessibleNo
Other information
Station code602 (Delaware, Lackawanna and Western)[2]
Fare zone4[3]
History
Rebuilt1912[4]
ElectrifiedSeptember 3, 1930[5]
Previous namesDoddtown[6]
Watsessing
Key dates
September 1910Original station depot razed[7]
Passengers
2017434 (average weekday)[8][9]
Services
Former services
Preceding station NJ Transit Following station
Bloomfield
toward Bay Street
Montclair Branch Ampere
(before 1991)
toward Hoboken
Preceding station Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Following station
Bloomfield
toward Montclair
Montclair Branch Ampere
toward Hoboken

The current Glen Ridge, Bloomfield and Watsessing stations along the Montclair branch were all built in 1912 during a grade separation program by the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad. During New Jersey Transit's running of the line, two stations between Watsessing and Newark Broad Street were closed due to low ridership—the Roseville Avenue station in Newark, at the junction with the Morristown Line on September 16, 1984,[10] and Ampere station in East Orange on April 7, 1991.[11] The word "Watsessing" is a Native American term that translates to "mouth of the creek".[4]

The station has been on the New Jersey State Historic Preservation Office listings since March 25, 1998, the last of the four stations from East Orange to Glen Ridge to receive the listing. On September 14, 2005, the entire Montclair Branch was added to the same listings, although Ampere, Bloomfield and Glen Ridge stations have been on the listings since March 17, 1984.[12]

Station layout and services edit

 
Watsessing Avenue station facing northward from Westinghouse Plaza

Watsessing Avenue station is located on the corner of Watsessing Avenue and Orange Street at Westinghouse Plaza in Bloomfield and is just blocks from Bloomfield's borders with East Orange and Orange. The former depot is currently used by the Bloomfield Police Benevolent Association. There are two below-street-level platforms at the Watsessing station. Ticket vending machines are available at street level on Watsessing Avenue.

The station also has two parking lots for use. Maintained by the Bloomfield Parking Authority, the first is on Westinghouse Plaza (near the former Westinghouse Lamp Plant) and has fourteen parking spaces. The parking uses daily parking rules, paying six days a week at $0.25 an hour, except for Sunday, when parking is free. A second lot is available at the intersection of Myrtle Street and Walnut Street. It has forty-five parking spots, two of which are handicap accessible. The lot also contains permit spaces six days a week and free on Sundays, with a cost of $20 parking per quarter (three months).[13]

The station has low-level side platforms that are not handicap accessible. The two nearest accessible stations are Newark Broad Street and Bay Street.[14]

History edit

Delaware, Lackawanna and Western ownership (1856–1976) edit

 
The former Watsessing Avenue station, prior to the grade separation in 1912

The history of a station at Watsessing Avenue in the Watsessing district of Bloomfield dates back to the Newark and Bloomfield Railroad, established in 1856.[15] The station, a houseless station off of Dodd Street, was deemed first as Doddtown by a railroad conductor. This name soon gave way to Watsessing, and in 1865, the line was bought by the Morris and Essex Railroad, running through trains.[6] The Morris and Essex Railroad was soon bought out by the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad, and a new station was built, deemed Watsessing.

In 1911, as the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad continued the project of eliminating at-grade crossings between streets and railroads, the Montclair Branch was the next to receive the structural change. Bloomfield criticized the Lackawanna railroad for making a disgrace of the community. The railroad proposed using $700,000 (1911 USD) of funds to construct a brand new station at Watsessing Avenue along with a new downtown Bloomfield station. The cost of elevating and depressing the railroad came up to about $20,000 (1911 USD) for the Lackawanna. This contract by the railroad and township was approved after negotiations dating back to 1908. The negotiations included a park to be built between both stations on both sides of the railroad. The park land cost the township $50,000 to buy for the construction, and it was to be turned over to the Essex County Park Commission.[16] The former station depot was razed in September 1910 for the construction project.[7]

 
Watsessing Avenue station before depressing the station as viewed past the former at-grade crossings

Construction was completed on a 1.5 miles (2.4 km) long segment of the Montclair Branch from East Orange to Glen Ridge and was opened to rail service on November 15, 1912. The project laid 91 pounds (41 kg) of track in addition to steel ties and stone ballast. The station has concrete crossings at Dodd Street, Arlington Avenue and Watsessing Avenue along with a new crossing of the Erie Railroad's Orange Branch just south of the station.[17] The design of Watsessing Avenue's new station was difficult due to the limited right-of-way. While making the separation, a new trench had to be dug, which included retaining walls that prevented moving the existing track alignment to delay railroad traffic. When the station was finished, tracks were shifted to make room for a second track. The station depot was built over the railroad tracks with four concrete arches to support the building. A four-inch (10 cm) ceiling was constructed on the arches, and the station was widened to take more volume of train service.[18]

The station served as the third station on the Montclair Branch, which was first electrified by technology created by Thomas Alva Edison in 1930. The overhead catenary wires were installed, making the line the first electrically run line on the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western alignment.[19] The station remained in service for the Lackawanna Railroad for three more decades, when the railroad merged with the Erie Railroad on October 17, 1960.[20] Although the now Erie-Lackawanna Railway continued to run the Montclair Branch, it reduced service, reducing the once two-rail alignment to one lone track, and removed most of the tracks at Lackawanna Terminal in Montclair.[4] On April 1, 1976, the station was transferred to the Consolidated Rail Corporation (Conrail) as the Erie-Lackawanna Railway was dissolved into the Conrail program.[20]

New Jersey Transit and historical status (1979–present) edit

 
These two staircases visible enabled Watsessing Avenue passengers to access the platforms from Orange Street without having to cross via the station building (at rear). Access to them was blocked off as part of the 2008 rehabilitation project.

In 1979, New Jersey Transit was formed to run bus and train service in place of Conrail and the New Jersey Department of Transportation. In 1983, New Jersey Transit took over rail service from Conrail, and just one year later, the line became a temporary diesel rail line when the overhead catenary wires had to be adjusted for conversion to higher electrical voltage. The station itself was still the third on the Montclair Branch, but the line now ran into a new station at Bay Street in Montclair. On March 17, 1984 all stations on the Montclair Branch but the Roseville Avenue station in Newark, Bay Street and Watsessing Avenue were added to the State Register of Historic Places. The same would occur on June 22, 1984 at the national level with Ampere, Glen Ridge and Bloomfield Stations being added to the National Register of Historic Places.[12] On September 16, 1984, Roseville Avenue station was closed,[10] and just over six years later, on April 7, 1991, Ampere station in East Orange was closed. Since then, Watsessing Avenue has been the first station New Jersey Transit has served on the Montclair Branch,[11] although East Orange has proposed reopening the station at Ampere as part of a redevelopment plan for the Ampere district.[21]

On March 25, 1998, the station at Watsessing Avenue was given the State Historical Preservation Organization honor that Ampere, Glen Ridge and Bloomfield stations received just fourteen years prior.[12] The station continued to receive service through the opening of Montclair Connection on September 30, 2002, which ended service as the Montclair Branch and began as the Montclair-Boonton Line, still the first station on the line after Newark Broad Street Station.[19] On September 10, 2007, New Jersey Transit announced the canopies of the old station, then 95 years old, were to be restored and repaired. The service contracted a $1.7 million project to Watertrol Incorporated of Cranford. At that time, the station served an average of 200 people daily.[22] Improvements for the station included brand new canopy lighting, repairs to the cantilever canopies, replacement of stairways and fencing, along with changing roof tiles and a new drainage system to replace the 1912 version. When the construction was finished in October 2008, the station now served nearly 450 people daily on average. A ceremony to mark its completion was held on October 30, 2008.[23]

See also edit

  • Kingsland station – The design of Watsessing Avenue with the depot above the tracks was a replica of the style used at Kingsland.

References edit

  1. ^ "Watsessing Avenue Station". NJ Transit. Retrieved July 5, 2023.
  2. ^ "List of Station Numbers". Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad. 1952. p. 2. Retrieved June 2, 2019.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ (PDF). Newark, New Jersey: New Jersey Transit Rail Operations. May 23, 2010. pp. 1–4. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 28, 2010. Retrieved July 12, 2010.
  4. ^ a b c Yanosey, Robert J. (2007). Lackawanna Railroad Facilities (In Color). Vol. 1: Hoboken to Dover. Scotch Plains, New Jersey: Morning Sun Books Inc. p. 102. ISBN 978-1-58248-214-9.
  5. ^ "D.L.&W. Electric Train Hoboken to Montclair". The Madison Eagle. September 5, 1930. p. 6. Retrieved January 31, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.  
  6. ^ a b Shaw, William H. (1884). History of Essex and Hudson Counties, New Jersey. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Everts & Peck Company. Retrieved July 29, 2010.
  7. ^ a b "Lackawanna's Improvements". The Montclair Times. September 3, 1910. p. 3. Retrieved March 5, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.  
  8. ^ "QUARTERLY RIDERSHIP TRENDS ANALYSIS" (PDF). New Jersey Transit. (PDF) from the original on April 19, 2013. Retrieved January 4, 2013.
  9. ^ "How Many Riders Use NJ Transit's Hoboken Train Station?". Hoboken Patch. Retrieved July 18, 2018.
  10. ^ a b Morris & Essex Lines Timetable (September 16, 1984 ed.). Newark, New Jersey: New Jersey Transit Rail Operations. 1984.
  11. ^ a b Morris & Essex Lines Timetable (April 7, 1991 ed.). Newark, New Jersey: New Jersey Transit Rail Operations. 1991.
  12. ^ a b c New Jersey State Historical Preservation Office (April 1, 2010). "New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places – Essex County". New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection. p. 1. Retrieved July 25, 2010.
  13. ^ "Park & Ride Guide – Watsessing Avenue". Newark, New Jersey: New Jersey Transit Rail Operations. 2010. Retrieved July 29, 2010.
  14. ^ . Newark, New Jersey: New Jersey Transit Rail Operations. 2010. Archived from the original on December 1, 2010. Retrieved July 29, 2010.
  15. ^ Urquhart, Frank John (1913). A History of the city of Newark, New Jersey. Vol. 1. Lewis Historical Publishing Company.
  16. ^ Arthur Hastings Grant, Harold Sinley Buttenheim (1911). The American City, Volumes 4–5. Buttenheim Publishing Corporation. p. 50. Retrieved July 24, 2010.
  17. ^ Annual report of the Board of Public Utility Commissioners of the State of New Jersey. Vol. Issue 7. New Jersey. Board of Public Utility Commissioners. 1912. p. 371. Retrieved July 27, 2010. {{cite book}}: |volume= has extra text (help)
  18. ^ Proceedings of the annual convention. Vol. 10. American Concrete Institute. 1917. Retrieved July 27, 2010.
  19. ^ a b "The Montclair-Boonton Line" (PDF). Newark, New Jersey: New Jersey Transit Rail Operations. 2002. Retrieved July 27, 2010.[permanent dead link]
  20. ^ a b Yanosey, Robert J. (2006). Erie Railroad Facilities (In Color). Vol. 1: New Jersey. Scotch Plains, New Jersey: Morning Sun Books Inc. p. 128. ISBN 1-58248-183-0.
  21. ^ "City of East Orange – Planning Overview" (PDF). East Orange, New Jersey: City of East Orange. February 2009. Retrieved July 28, 2010.
  22. ^ "NJ Transit to Restore Canopy at Watsessing Station Renovations" (Press release). New Jersey Transit Rail Operations. September 10, 2007. Retrieved July 27, 2010.
  23. ^ "Ceremony Marks Completion of Watsessing Station Renovations" (Press release). New Jersey Transit Rail Operations. October 30, 2008. Retrieved July 27, 2010.

External links edit

  • Watessing Avenue entrance from Google Maps Street View

watsessing, avenue, station, also, known, watsessing, jersey, transit, rail, station, bloomfield, jersey, along, montclair, boonton, line, located, beneath, bloomfield, police, benevolent, association, meeting, hall, which, formerly, served, station, building,. Watsessing Avenue station also known as Watsessing is a New Jersey Transit rail station in Bloomfield New Jersey along the Montclair Boonton Line It is located beneath the Bloomfield Police Benevolent Association meeting hall which formerly served as the station building near the corner of Watsessing Avenue and Orange Street in Bloomfield It is one of two stations on the line where the boarding platform is below ground level the Glen Ridge station two stops away from it is the other The Watsessing station and the Kingsland station in Lyndhurst on the Main Line shared similar designs both station platforms are located below street level and were built about the same time Watsessing AvenueWatsessing Avenue station as viewed from its outbound platform showing results of rehabilitation project undertaken in 2008 General informationLocationWatsessing AvenueBloomfield New JerseyCoordinates40 46 58 N 74 11 55 W 40 7827 N 74 1986 W 40 7827 74 1986Owned byNew Jersey TransitPlatforms2 side platformsTracks2ConnectionsNJ Transit Bus 94ConstructionStructure typeBelow gradePlatform levels2Parking59 spaces 2 accessible spaces 1 Bicycle facilitiesRacksAccessibleNoOther informationStation code602 Delaware Lackawanna and Western 2 Fare zone4 3 HistoryRebuilt1912 4 ElectrifiedSeptember 3 1930 5 Previous namesDoddtown 6 WatsessingKey datesSeptember 1910Original station depot razed 7 Passengers2017434 average weekday 8 9 ServicesPreceding station NJ Transit Following stationBloomfieldtoward Hackettstown Montclair Boonton Line Newark Broad Streettoward New York or HobokenFormer servicesPreceding station NJ Transit Following stationBloomfieldtoward Bay Street Montclair Branch Ampere before 1991 toward HobokenPreceding station Delaware Lackawanna and Western Railroad Following stationBloomfieldtoward Montclair Montclair Branch Amperetoward HobokenThe current Glen Ridge Bloomfield and Watsessing stations along the Montclair branch were all built in 1912 during a grade separation program by the Delaware Lackawanna and Western Railroad During New Jersey Transit s running of the line two stations between Watsessing and Newark Broad Street were closed due to low ridership the Roseville Avenue station in Newark at the junction with the Morristown Line on September 16 1984 10 and Ampere station in East Orange on April 7 1991 11 The word Watsessing is a Native American term that translates to mouth of the creek 4 The station has been on the New Jersey State Historic Preservation Office listings since March 25 1998 the last of the four stations from East Orange to Glen Ridge to receive the listing On September 14 2005 the entire Montclair Branch was added to the same listings although Ampere Bloomfield and Glen Ridge stations have been on the listings since March 17 1984 12 Contents 1 Station layout and services 2 History 2 1 Delaware Lackawanna and Western ownership 1856 1976 2 2 New Jersey Transit and historical status 1979 present 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksStation layout and services edit nbsp Watsessing Avenue station facing northward from Westinghouse PlazaWatsessing Avenue station is located on the corner of Watsessing Avenue and Orange Street at Westinghouse Plaza in Bloomfield and is just blocks from Bloomfield s borders with East Orange and Orange The former depot is currently used by the Bloomfield Police Benevolent Association There are two below street level platforms at the Watsessing station Ticket vending machines are available at street level on Watsessing Avenue The station also has two parking lots for use Maintained by the Bloomfield Parking Authority the first is on Westinghouse Plaza near the former Westinghouse Lamp Plant and has fourteen parking spaces The parking uses daily parking rules paying six days a week at 0 25 an hour except for Sunday when parking is free A second lot is available at the intersection of Myrtle Street and Walnut Street It has forty five parking spots two of which are handicap accessible The lot also contains permit spaces six days a week and free on Sundays with a cost of 20 parking per quarter three months 13 The station has low level side platforms that are not handicap accessible The two nearest accessible stations are Newark Broad Street and Bay Street 14 History editDelaware Lackawanna and Western ownership 1856 1976 edit nbsp The former Watsessing Avenue station prior to the grade separation in 1912The history of a station at Watsessing Avenue in the Watsessing district of Bloomfield dates back to the Newark and Bloomfield Railroad established in 1856 15 The station a houseless station off of Dodd Street was deemed first as Doddtown by a railroad conductor This name soon gave way to Watsessing and in 1865 the line was bought by the Morris and Essex Railroad running through trains 6 The Morris and Essex Railroad was soon bought out by the Delaware Lackawanna and Western Railroad and a new station was built deemed Watsessing In 1911 as the Delaware Lackawanna and Western Railroad continued the project of eliminating at grade crossings between streets and railroads the Montclair Branch was the next to receive the structural change Bloomfield criticized the Lackawanna railroad for making a disgrace of the community The railroad proposed using 700 000 1911 USD of funds to construct a brand new station at Watsessing Avenue along with a new downtown Bloomfield station The cost of elevating and depressing the railroad came up to about 20 000 1911 USD for the Lackawanna This contract by the railroad and township was approved after negotiations dating back to 1908 The negotiations included a park to be built between both stations on both sides of the railroad The park land cost the township 50 000 to buy for the construction and it was to be turned over to the Essex County Park Commission 16 The former station depot was razed in September 1910 for the construction project 7 nbsp Watsessing Avenue station before depressing the station as viewed past the former at grade crossingsConstruction was completed on a 1 5 miles 2 4 km long segment of the Montclair Branch from East Orange to Glen Ridge and was opened to rail service on November 15 1912 The project laid 91 pounds 41 kg of track in addition to steel ties and stone ballast The station has concrete crossings at Dodd Street Arlington Avenue and Watsessing Avenue along with a new crossing of the Erie Railroad s Orange Branch just south of the station 17 The design of Watsessing Avenue s new station was difficult due to the limited right of way While making the separation a new trench had to be dug which included retaining walls that prevented moving the existing track alignment to delay railroad traffic When the station was finished tracks were shifted to make room for a second track The station depot was built over the railroad tracks with four concrete arches to support the building A four inch 10 cm ceiling was constructed on the arches and the station was widened to take more volume of train service 18 The station served as the third station on the Montclair Branch which was first electrified by technology created by Thomas Alva Edison in 1930 The overhead catenary wires were installed making the line the first electrically run line on the Delaware Lackawanna and Western alignment 19 The station remained in service for the Lackawanna Railroad for three more decades when the railroad merged with the Erie Railroad on October 17 1960 20 Although the now Erie Lackawanna Railway continued to run the Montclair Branch it reduced service reducing the once two rail alignment to one lone track and removed most of the tracks at Lackawanna Terminal in Montclair 4 On April 1 1976 the station was transferred to the Consolidated Rail Corporation Conrail as the Erie Lackawanna Railway was dissolved into the Conrail program 20 New Jersey Transit and historical status 1979 present edit nbsp These two staircases visible enabled Watsessing Avenue passengers to access the platforms from Orange Street without having to cross via the station building at rear Access to them was blocked off as part of the 2008 rehabilitation project In 1979 New Jersey Transit was formed to run bus and train service in place of Conrail and the New Jersey Department of Transportation In 1983 New Jersey Transit took over rail service from Conrail and just one year later the line became a temporary diesel rail line when the overhead catenary wires had to be adjusted for conversion to higher electrical voltage The station itself was still the third on the Montclair Branch but the line now ran into a new station at Bay Street in Montclair On March 17 1984 all stations on the Montclair Branch but the Roseville Avenue station in Newark Bay Street and Watsessing Avenue were added to the State Register of Historic Places The same would occur on June 22 1984 at the national level with Ampere Glen Ridge and Bloomfield Stations being added to the National Register of Historic Places 12 On September 16 1984 Roseville Avenue station was closed 10 and just over six years later on April 7 1991 Ampere station in East Orange was closed Since then Watsessing Avenue has been the first station New Jersey Transit has served on the Montclair Branch 11 although East Orange has proposed reopening the station at Ampere as part of a redevelopment plan for the Ampere district 21 On March 25 1998 the station at Watsessing Avenue was given the State Historical Preservation Organization honor that Ampere Glen Ridge and Bloomfield stations received just fourteen years prior 12 The station continued to receive service through the opening of Montclair Connection on September 30 2002 which ended service as the Montclair Branch and began as the Montclair Boonton Line still the first station on the line after Newark Broad Street Station 19 On September 10 2007 New Jersey Transit announced the canopies of the old station then 95 years old were to be restored and repaired The service contracted a 1 7 million project to Watertrol Incorporated of Cranford At that time the station served an average of 200 people daily 22 Improvements for the station included brand new canopy lighting repairs to the cantilever canopies replacement of stairways and fencing along with changing roof tiles and a new drainage system to replace the 1912 version When the construction was finished in October 2008 the station now served nearly 450 people daily on average A ceremony to mark its completion was held on October 30 2008 23 See also editKingsland station The design of Watsessing Avenue with the depot above the tracks was a replica of the style used at Kingsland References edit Watsessing Avenue Station NJ Transit Retrieved July 5 2023 List of Station Numbers Delaware Lackawanna and Western Railroad 1952 p 2 Retrieved June 2 2019 permanent dead link Montclair Boonton Line Timetables PDF Newark New Jersey New Jersey Transit Rail Operations May 23 2010 pp 1 4 Archived from the original PDF on July 28 2010 Retrieved July 12 2010 a b c Yanosey Robert J 2007 Lackawanna Railroad Facilities In Color Vol 1 Hoboken to Dover Scotch Plains New Jersey Morning Sun Books Inc p 102 ISBN 978 1 58248 214 9 D L amp W Electric Train Hoboken to Montclair The Madison Eagle September 5 1930 p 6 Retrieved January 31 2021 via Newspapers com nbsp a b Shaw William H 1884 History of Essex and Hudson Counties New Jersey Philadelphia Pennsylvania Everts amp Peck Company Retrieved July 29 2010 a b Lackawanna s Improvements The Montclair Times September 3 1910 p 3 Retrieved March 5 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp QUARTERLY RIDERSHIP TRENDS ANALYSIS PDF New Jersey Transit Archived PDF from the original on April 19 2013 Retrieved January 4 2013 How Many Riders Use NJ Transit s Hoboken Train Station Hoboken Patch Retrieved July 18 2018 a b Morris amp Essex Lines Timetable September 16 1984 ed Newark New Jersey New Jersey Transit Rail Operations 1984 a b Morris amp Essex Lines Timetable April 7 1991 ed Newark New Jersey New Jersey Transit Rail Operations 1991 a b c New Jersey State Historical Preservation Office April 1 2010 New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places Essex County New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection p 1 Retrieved July 25 2010 Park amp Ride Guide Watsessing Avenue Newark New Jersey New Jersey Transit Rail Operations 2010 Retrieved July 29 2010 Montclair Boonton Line Newark New Jersey New Jersey Transit Rail Operations 2010 Archived from the original on December 1 2010 Retrieved July 29 2010 Urquhart Frank John 1913 A History of the city of Newark New Jersey Vol 1 Lewis Historical Publishing Company Arthur Hastings Grant Harold Sinley Buttenheim 1911 The American City Volumes 4 5 Buttenheim Publishing Corporation p 50 Retrieved July 24 2010 Annual report of the Board of Public Utility Commissioners of the State of New Jersey Vol Issue 7 New Jersey Board of Public Utility Commissioners 1912 p 371 Retrieved July 27 2010 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a volume has extra text help Proceedings of the annual convention Vol 10 American Concrete Institute 1917 Retrieved July 27 2010 a b The Montclair Boonton Line PDF Newark New Jersey New Jersey Transit Rail Operations 2002 Retrieved July 27 2010 permanent dead link a b Yanosey Robert J 2006 Erie Railroad Facilities In Color Vol 1 New Jersey Scotch Plains New Jersey Morning Sun Books Inc p 128 ISBN 1 58248 183 0 City of East Orange Planning Overview PDF East Orange New Jersey City of East Orange February 2009 Retrieved July 28 2010 NJ Transit to Restore Canopy at Watsessing Station Renovations Press release New Jersey Transit Rail Operations September 10 2007 Retrieved July 27 2010 Ceremony Marks Completion of Watsessing Station Renovations Press release New Jersey Transit Rail Operations October 30 2008 Retrieved July 27 2010 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Watsessing Avenue NJT station The Blue Comet com Hoboken Terminal Newark and Montclair Branch photos Watessing Avenue entrance from Google Maps Street View Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Watsessing Avenue station amp oldid 1212704406, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.